Rashad Ganaway heard the first judge's score – 76-76 - and immediately the obvious came to mind.

"I thought it was going to be a draw," he said.

But it wasn't. The two other judges' scores were read and Ganaway had his third straight victory, this one by majority decision over Justo Vallecillo on Saturday night in front of about 1,200 fans at Sunset Station.

Two of the three judges, Joel Elizondo and Will Esperon, scored it 78-74 and 78-75, respectively, while the 76-76 scorecard belonged to Rick Crocker.

"I knew it was going to be close," said Ganaway (14-3-1, 9 KOs) , a lightweight who moved from Little Rock, Ark., to San Antonio six months ago in order to resurrect his career. "But I thought I won it."

He won the eight-round bout by staying away from Vallecillo (6-15, 3 KOs) and scoring from the outside.

Vallecillo was the aggressor but may have lost because of slow start.

But the full-time construction worker and part-time boxer thought he won the fight and, once again, was robbed of a decision.

Vallecillo is used to going into his opponent's back yard and losing a dubious decision. He says he didn't expect anything different fighting in his own back yard.

"The judges always seem to be against me," Vallecillo said in Spanish through an interpreter. "The only way I'm going to win is by knocking out my opponent."

Ganaway's victory highlighted a six-bout card that included one of the more bizarre fights in recent memory.

That was the co-main event in which Javier Rodriguez (5-0-1) won by disqualification over Gilbert Cancino (1-6) of Brownsville.

Repeatedly during the first round of the scheduled four-round bout, Cancino turned his back on Rodriguez to respond to the crowd as the fight was in progress.

Every time the crowd jeered or booed, Cancino would turn and gesture back at them.

Finally, referee Rafael Ramos had enough, halting the bout at 1:09 of the first round.

"He was crazy," Ramos said of Cancino. "You don't do that in boxing."

Rodriguez threw all of three punches. The only sweat he worked up came in the dressing room before the fight.

"I wasn't mad," Rodriguez said. "I was waiting for him to stop so I could fight. I've never seen anything like it."

In a battle of super flyweights, Omar Gonzalez Jr. (5-8, 1 KO) turned in an impressive performance, outboxing Rafael Casias (4-7) of Arlington over six rounds to earn a unanimous decision.

Gonzalez opened up a cut over the right eye of Casias in the fourth and won by identical scores of 58-56.

Elsewhere on the undercard, San Antonians Jesse Anguiano and Robert Ledesma had the crowd on its feet for much of their action-filled, four-round, super bantamweight bout.

Anguiano (1-2) kept the pressure on and battered a very game Ledesma (0-2) from the opening bell to win a unanimous decision.

In a bout that was short on skill but long on action - while it lasted - hulking heavyweight Cody East (1-0, 1 KO) of Los Lunas, N.M., dropped Angelo Gutierrez (2-1, 2 KOs) of San Marcos with a straight right hand at 2:50 of the first round to win by TKO.

John Arrevalo (1-0) of San Antonio won his pro debut with a split-decision victory over Roberto Lara (0-2) of Laredo in a four-round, middleweight bout that probably deserved no winner.